Louise Zeng, a 17-year-old senior at Sugar Land's Dulles High School, is one of 21 girls from 13 countries chosen to be part of Disney's "Dream Big, Princess" campaign in which young filmmakers tell the stories of trailblazing women.

Zeng will be profiling Victoria Arlen, the gold-medal Paralympian and ESPN broadcaster who also wrote the memoir "Locked In," a chronicle of how she overcame two autoimmune diseases that left her unable to move or speak.

It will be part of a digital video series, called #DreamBigPrincess, that will be shared on global media platforms from Wednesday through Nov. 20. For each like or share of a video or photo on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter with #DreamBigPrincess, Disney Worldwide Services will donate $1 to Girl Up, an organization founded by the United Nations Foundation in 2010 to support girls' empowerment, according to a release. The videos, each of which was shot on an iPhone X, can be viewed here.

Aside from the Disney project, Zeng started the Dulles Miracle Club, an organization to support Texas Children's Hospital and was a U.S. State Department youth ambassador to Colombia in 2017.

Other women profiled in the series are: Jennifer Lee, chief creative officer at Walt Disney Animation Studios; Karen Jonz, a Brazilian skateboarder, designer and musician; Kathleen Kennedy, film producer and president of LucasFilm; and Asmaa Boujibar, a research scientist and the first Moroccan woman to join NASA Johnson Space Center.